Bulgarian royal family
(Redirected from Royal House of Bulgaria)
House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha-Koháry (Bulgarian royal line) | |
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Parent house | Saxe-Coburg-Gotha-Koháry |
Country | Bulgaria |
Founded | 1887 |
Founder | Ferdinand I |
Current head | Simeon II |
Final ruler | Simeon II |
Titles | Prince (Княз), Tsar (Цар) |
Estate(s) | Vrana Palace |
Deposition | 1946 |
Bulgarian Royalty House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha |
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Ferdinand I |
Boris III |
Simeon II |
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The last Bulgarian royal family (Българско царско семейство, Balgarsko tsarsko semeystvo) is a line of the Koháry branch of the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, which ruled Bulgaria from 1887 to 1946. The last tsar, Simeon II, became Prime Minister of Bulgaria in 2001 and remained in office until 2005. Members of the royal family hold the titles of Prince (Princess) of Bulgaria and Duke (Duchess) in Saxony, with the style of Royal Highness.[1]
Coburg Peak on Trinity Peninsula in Antarctica is named after the Bulgarian royal house of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.[2]
Members of the royal family
The Bulgarian royal family includes:[1]
- Tsar Simeon II and Tsaritsa Margarita (the Tsar and his wife)
- The Dowager Princess of Turnovo (the widow of the Tsar's first son)
- Boris, Prince of Turnovo (the Tsar's grandson and heir apparent)
- Prince Beltran (the Tsar's grandson)
- Kyril, Prince of Preslav (the Tsar's son)
- Princess Mafalda, Mrs. Abousleiman (the Tsar's granddaughter)
- Princess Olimpia (the Tsar's granddaughter)
- Prince Tassilo (the Tsar's grandson)
- Kubrat, Prince of Panagiurishte and Carla, Princess of Panagiurishte (the Tsar's son and daughter-in-law)
- Prince Mirko (the Tsar's grandson)
- Prince Lukás (the Tsar's grandson)
- Prince Tirso (the Tsar's grandson)
- Konstantin-Assen, Prince of Vidin and Maria, Princess of Vidin (the Tsar's son and daughter-in-law)
- Prince Umberto (the Tsar's grandson)
- Princess Sofia (the Tsar's granddaughter)
- Princess Kalina, Mrs. Muñoz (the Tsar's daughter)
- Prince Simeon-Hassan of Bulgaria (the Tsar's grandson)
- The Dowager Princess of Turnovo (the widow of the Tsar's first son)
- Marie Louise, Princess of Koháry (the Tsar's sister)
Members of the extended family
The Tsar's extended family includes:
- Marc Abousleiman (the Tsar's grandson-in-law, husband of Princess Mafalda)
- Antonio Muñoz (the Tsar's son-in-law, husband of Princess Kalina) [3]
- Bronislaw Chrobok, Prince consort of Koháry (the Tsar's brother-in-law, second husband of Marie Louise, Princess of Koháry)
- Prince Boris and Princess Cheryl of Leiningen (the Tsar's nephew and niece-in-law)
- Prince Nicholas of Leiningen (the Tsar's grandnephew)
- Prince Karl Heinrich of Leiningen (the Tsar's grandnephew)
- Princess Juliana of Leiningen (the Tsar's grandniece)
- Prince Hermann Friedrich and Princess Deborah of Leiningen (the Tsar's nephew and niece-in-law)
- Princess Tatiana, Mrs. Reynolds and Clayton Reynolds (the Tsar's grandniece and grandnephew-in-law)
- Princess Nadia, Mrs. Baker and Ian Baker (the Tsar's grandniece and grandnephew-in-law)
- Princess Alexandra of Leiningen (the Tsar's grandniece)
- Princess Alexandra, Mrs. Raposo de Magalhães and Jorge Champalimaud Raposo de Magalhães (the Tsar's niece and nephew-in-law)
- Prince Luis de Magalhães von Kohary (the Tsar's grandnephew)
- Princess Giovanna de Magalhães von Kohary (the Tsar's grandniece)
- Princess Clémentine de Magalhães von Kohary (the Tsar's grandniece)
- Prince Pawel and Princess Ariana Chrobok of Koháry (the Tsar nephew and niece-in-law)
- Princess Maya Chrobok of Koháry (the Tsar's grandniece)
- Prince Alexander Ferdinand Chrobok of Koháry (the Tsar's grandnephew)
- Prince Boris and Princess Cheryl of Leiningen (the Tsar's nephew and niece-in-law)
- François Luce-Bailly, Viscount of Chevigny (the Tsar's cousin-n-law, widower of Duchess Margareta Luise of Württemberg, daughter of Princess Nadezhda)
- Duke Eugen Eberhard of Württemberg (the Tsar's cousin, son of Princess Nadezhda)
- Duke Alexander Eugen of Württemberg (the Tsar's cousin, son of Princess Nadezhda)
- Duchess Sophie of Württemberg (the Tsar's cousin, daughter of Princess Nadezhda)
- Duke Boris of Sredets (the Tsar's first cousin, twice removed)
Desceased members
- Princess Marie Louise (first wife of then-Prince Ferdinand I, died in 1899)
- Clémentine, Princess August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha-Koháry (mother of tsar Ferdinand I, died in 1907)
- Tsarina Eleonore (second wife of tsar Ferdinand I, died in 1917)
- Tsar Boris III (eldest son of tsar Ferdinand I, died in 1943)
- Kiril, Prince of Preslav (youngest son of tsar Ferdinand I, died in 1945)
- Tsar Ferdinand I (son of Prince August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha-Koháry, died in 1948)
- Duke Albrecht Eugen of Württemberg (husband of Princess Nadezhda, died in 1954)
- Nadezhda, Duchess Albrecht Eugen of Württemberg (youngest daughter of tsar Ferdinand I, died in 1958)
- Princess Eudoxia (eldest daughter of tsar Ferdinand I, died in 1985)
- Antonio Rôxo de Ramos-Bandeira (former husband of Duchess Sophie of Württemberg, daughter of Princess Nadezhda, died in 1987)
- Prince Karl of Leiningen (former husband of Marie Louise, Princess of Koháry, died in 1990)
- Tsaritsa Giovanna (widow of tsar Boris III, died in 2000)
- Princess Alžbeta (widow of former tsar Ferdinand I, died in 2015)
- Duchess Margareta Luise, Viscountess of Chevigny (eldest daughter of Princess Nadezhda, died in 2017)
- Duke Ferdinand Eugen of Württemberg (eldest son of Princess Nadezhda, died in 2020)
- Princess Milena of Leiningen (the Tsar's niece-in-law, former wife of Prince Boris)
Tsardom of Bulgaria
The ruling members were:
- Ferdinand I (1887–1918)
- Boris III (1918–1943)
- Simeon II (1943–1946)
See also
Notes
- ^ a b Almanach de Gotha (187th ed.). 2004. pp. 124–125.
- ^ Coburg Peak. SCAR Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica
- ^ Н.Ц.В. Княгиня Калина (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 2010-12-20.
External links
- Media related to House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha-Koháry (Bulgaria) at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website of Simeon II of Bulgaria